1st Edition
Medieval Courtyard Design Converging Urban Morphologies from Europe to the Middle East
List of figures
List of contributors
Preface
PART ONE: Introduction and Foundation
Chapter I: The Courtyard as Adaptable Concept
Khosrow Bozorgi
Chapter II: Convergent Evolution in Courtyard Architecture: A Cross-Cultural Analysis
Khosrow Bozorgi
PART TWO: From Cross-Cultural Precedents to Archetypal Urban Formation
Chapter III: Paris Courtyards: Definitions and Diversity
Peter Soppelsa
Chapter IV: The Courtyards in Florentine Domestic Architecture of the Medieval and Renaissance Periods
Gianluca Belli (translated by Khosrow Bozorgi)
Chapter V: The Courtyard in Middle Ages Civil Architecture in Siena
Fabio Gabbrielli and Michele Pellegrini (translated by Khosrow Bozorgi)
Chapter VI: Granada’s Architectural Legacy: A Study of Historic Courtyards and the Alhambra
Juan Manuel Barrios Rozúa
Chapter VII: Yazd’s Spatial Hierarchies: Courtyard Typology and the Genesis of Urban Form
Khosrow Bozorgi
PART THREE: Synthesis and Conclusion
Chapter VIII: Patterns of Spatial Consonance: Courtyard Architecture as a Collective Language
Khosrow Bozorgi
Index
Biography
Khosrow Bozorgi is an endowed professor of architecture at the University of Oklahoma’s Gibbs College of Architecture. He earned his undergraduate degree from the National University of Iran (1975) and Master’s and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania (1980s), specializing in design theory and architectural history. Dr. Bozorgi founded OU’s Ph.D. Program in Planning, Design, and Construction and established the Center for Middle Eastern Architecture and Culture. His research examines architectural and urban morphology across the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe. With 40 years of experience at leading American and French firms, he has contributed to major projects across three continents. A Presidential Professor and Graham Foundation grant recipient, his scholarship includes “The Philadelphia House” (2023), exploring how architects blend design principles with local American traditions.






